Surveillance showed the older Tsarnaev brother visiting a Salafi mosque in Makhachkala 6 times, meeting with a member of an Islamic underground group. The guy he was meeting with and Tsarnaev disappeared before authorities questioned them. Per the Dagestani police, the FBI never responded.
More of the poisonous fruit of Obama whitewashing jihad from counter terror programs in the US.

The Boston jihad bomber should be treated as an enemy combatant. This
delusion of treating jihad as a crime is silly and dangerous.

Why was the Boston jihadi allowed to become a US citizen (on 9/11, no less) when he had jihadist ties?

BOSTON (NBC) -- Federal prosecutors were putting the finishing
touches on charges against the surviving marathon bombing suspect on
Sunday — as NBC News learned that Russian intelligence agencies
contacted the FBI last year about his older brother.

Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev, the 19-year-old man accused in the Boston Marathon bombing
that killed three people and injured more than 180 remained in serious
condition at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

Law enforcement
sources said federal prosecutors are putting the final touches on the
charges against Tsarnaev, and their goal is to file them today.

A
senior law enforcement official also confirmed Sunday that Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev is suffering from a wound to his throat that has left him
unable to talk.

This has delayed efforts by the special high value
detainee interrogation team to talk to him without advising him of his
Miranda rights, the source said. Gov. Deval Patrick told reporters
Saturday that Tsarnaev was "unable to communicate."

Boston Mayor
Thomas Menino said investigators may never be able to orally question
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in an interview on Sunday. "And we don't know if we'll
ever be able to question the individual," Menino said.

Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev remained in "serious condition," the FBI said in a statement
released on Sunday at the request of the hospital where a number of
bombing victims also have received treatment.

His brother, the man
identified by the FBI as Suspect 1, 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was
killed in a firefight with police following a wild chase into the suburb
of Watertown on Thursday night.

The brothers hurled a
pressure-cooker bomb similar to the two that went off at the marathon
during the firefight, Watertown Police Chief Edward Deveau said on
Saturday. The men were in two cars when confronted by a lone police
officer, Deveau said, and later threw four grenade-like explosives at
pursuing officers.

Much remained unknown on Sunday about what might have driven the two suspects to violence.

A
police official source in Makhachkala, Dagestan, told NBC News on
Sunday that the Russian internal security service reached out to the FBI
last November with some questions about Tamerlan, and handed over a
copy of case file on him.

Tsarnaev had first popped up on the
local police radar in Dagestan last summer, the source said. During
routine surveillance of an individual known to be involved in the
militant Islamic underground movement, the police witnessed Tamerlan
meet the latter at a Salafi mosque in Makhachkala, the police official
said.

It was one of six times in total that surveillance officials
witnessed Tsarnaev meeting this militant at the same mosque, according
to the police official.

The militant contact later disappeared,
the police official said, but so did Tsarnaev before investigators had a
chance to speak with him. The FBI never responded, according to the
Dagestani police official.

Also, crime scene units returned to the
scene of Monday's twin explosions that brought an annual springtime
rite to an end in screams and smoke. Debris and trash not far from the
bomb site on Boylston Street were taken away in garbage trucks on
Sunday after being sifted for evidence.

Secretary of Defense Chuck
Hagel said he has not seen evidence to link the bombings to any
militant or terrorist group on Sunday, and declined to speculate on
whether or not Dzhokhar Tsarnaev could be sent to Guantanamo Bay.

"We
just don't have the facts, and until we get the facts, then it will be
the responsibility of law enforcement, DOJ, and other institutions to
make some determination as to how that individual should be treated,
detained, charged, and all that goes with it," Hagel said. "But right
now we just don't know enough about it."

A funeral for marathon
victim Krystle Campbell, 29, a restaurant manager, is scheduled for
Monday at St. Joseph Church in her home town of Medford, Mass.

About
36,000 runners participated in the London Marathon on Sunday amid
heightened security, many of them wearing black ribbons to commemorate
the victims in Boston or carrying "For Boston" signs.

Comments

Surveillance showed the older Tsarnaev brother visiting a Salafi mosque in Makhachkala 6 times, meeting with a member of an Islamic underground group. The guy he was meeting with and Tsarnaev disappeared before authorities questioned them. Per the Dagestani police, the FBI never responded.
More of the poisonous fruit of Obama whitewashing jihad from counter terror programs in the US.

The Boston jihad bomber should be treated as an enemy combatant. This
delusion of treating jihad as a crime is silly and dangerous.

Why was the Boston jihadi allowed to become a US citizen (on 9/11, no less) when he had jihadist ties?

BOSTON (NBC) -- Federal prosecutors were putting the finishing
touches on charges against the surviving marathon bombing suspect on
Sunday — as NBC News learned that Russian intelligence agencies
contacted the FBI last year about his older brother.

Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev, the 19-year-old man accused in the Boston Marathon bombing
that killed three people and injured more than 180 remained in serious
condition at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

Law enforcement
sources said federal prosecutors are putting the final touches on the
charges against Tsarnaev, and their goal is to file them today.

A
senior law enforcement official also confirmed Sunday that Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev is suffering from a wound to his throat that has left him
unable to talk.

This has delayed efforts by the special high value
detainee interrogation team to talk to him without advising him of his
Miranda rights, the source said. Gov. Deval Patrick told reporters
Saturday that Tsarnaev was "unable to communicate."

Boston Mayor
Thomas Menino said investigators may never be able to orally question
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev in an interview on Sunday. "And we don't know if we'll
ever be able to question the individual," Menino said.

Dzhokhar
Tsarnaev remained in "serious condition," the FBI said in a statement
released on Sunday at the request of the hospital where a number of
bombing victims also have received treatment.

His brother, the man
identified by the FBI as Suspect 1, 26-year-old Tamerlan Tsarnaev, was
killed in a firefight with police following a wild chase into the suburb
of Watertown on Thursday night.

The brothers hurled a
pressure-cooker bomb similar to the two that went off at the marathon
during the firefight, Watertown Police Chief Edward Deveau said on
Saturday. The men were in two cars when confronted by a lone police
officer, Deveau said, and later threw four grenade-like explosives at
pursuing officers.

Much remained unknown on Sunday about what might have driven the two suspects to violence.

A
police official source in Makhachkala, Dagestan, told NBC News on
Sunday that the Russian internal security service reached out to the FBI
last November with some questions about Tamerlan, and handed over a
copy of case file on him.

Tsarnaev had first popped up on the
local police radar in Dagestan last summer, the source said. During
routine surveillance of an individual known to be involved in the
militant Islamic underground movement, the police witnessed Tamerlan
meet the latter at a Salafi mosque in Makhachkala, the police official
said.

It was one of six times in total that surveillance officials
witnessed Tsarnaev meeting this militant at the same mosque, according
to the police official.

The militant contact later disappeared,
the police official said, but so did Tsarnaev before investigators had a
chance to speak with him. The FBI never responded, according to the
Dagestani police official.

Also, crime scene units returned to the
scene of Monday's twin explosions that brought an annual springtime
rite to an end in screams and smoke. Debris and trash not far from the
bomb site on Boylston Street were taken away in garbage trucks on
Sunday after being sifted for evidence.

Secretary of Defense Chuck
Hagel said he has not seen evidence to link the bombings to any
militant or terrorist group on Sunday, and declined to speculate on
whether or not Dzhokhar Tsarnaev could be sent to Guantanamo Bay.

"We
just don't have the facts, and until we get the facts, then it will be
the responsibility of law enforcement, DOJ, and other institutions to
make some determination as to how that individual should be treated,
detained, charged, and all that goes with it," Hagel said. "But right
now we just don't know enough about it."

A funeral for marathon
victim Krystle Campbell, 29, a restaurant manager, is scheduled for
Monday at St. Joseph Church in her home town of Medford, Mass.

About
36,000 runners participated in the London Marathon on Sunday amid
heightened security, many of them wearing black ribbons to commemorate
the victims in Boston or carrying "For Boston" signs.